Marjory Bankson Books

Marjory is a potter, a seasoned spiritual guide, and the author of six books. Her most recent book, Stalking the Spirit in a Do-It-Yourself Church, is the story of Seekers Church as it emerged from The Church of the Saviour. Former president of Faith At Work (now called Lumunos) and editor of Faith@Work magazine for over twenty years, Marjory now chairs the Ecumenical Council of The Church of the Saviour, facilitates clergy support groups in the Washington, DC area and travels nationally to offer retreats and workshops. She currently teaches on call, desert spirituality and creative aging at Seekers Church, Washington National Cathedral, the Servant Leadership School, Wesley Seminary in Washington DC and Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia.

Marjory Shares:

Books were my best friends in the twenty years that we moved for my husband’s career. I began writing my first book, Braided Streams: Esther and a Woman’s Way of Growing, when we lived in Germany and I couldn’t legally work. It was my way to be in conversation with others who wanted to recover women’s stories from the Bible, and that led me to seminary in the early 80s.

In 1985, I became the first woman president of Faith At Work, a relational ministry started in the late 30s by Sam Shoemaker, who was the pastor who helped “Bill W” start Alcoholics Anonymous. Editing and publishing F@W magazine gave me lots of opportunity to write, to explore relational theology, and to design retreats. Seasons of Friendship and Call to the Soul came out of those years.

When I retired from F@W in 2008, I thought I would return to an earlier vocation as a potter. But the book that grew out of my studio time, The Soulwork of Clay, raised all kinds of questions among friends and former retreatants about retirement and call. Because I believe that God’s call spirals through our lives, taking different forms in different seasons, I wrote Creative Aging: Rethinking Retirement and Non-retirement in a Changing World. That continues to open many conversations about the meaning and purpose of these generative years.

When Sonya Dyer retired from Seekers, and was preparing to move to North Carolina in 2000, she gave me her notes and records from the early days, and the Stewards of Seekers authorized me to write our story. At the time, we were immersed in finding a new home for Seekers. It took two early drafts, lots of community comment, and some history in our new location on Carroll Street to find a suitable pause for the story, Stalking the Spirit in a Do-It-Yourself Church. I have tried to make this an accurate historical record as well as the story of how we have tried to listen for guidance from the Sprit at crucial turning points.

Explores the spiritual dimensions of retirement and aging, offering creative ways to to share your gifts and experience, particularly when retirement leaves you questioning who you are when you are no longer defined by your career.

Draws on the biblical story of Ruth and Naomi, exploring what we can learn from their unique friendship that survived marriages and moves, death and displacement. The book proposes that we need different kinds of friendships in different seasons of our lives.

Sermons

March 17, 2019
The Second Sunday in Lent
Good morning. I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve started a sermon with, “when I signed up to preach, I thought I was going to talk about [whatever it was] but it turns out that now I’m going to talk about this.” Today is another one of those times. I actually signed up to preach later in Lent,...